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TSU

Lightning Strike Exposes TSU's Aging North Loop Wiring: Two Months of Sporadic Power Outages Lead 4,000 Students to Petition for Tuition Refunds

TNpower outageadvisorymedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

Beginning September 4, 2019, Tennessee State University in Nashville experienced the first of many power outages that would recur throughout the fall semester, stemming from a lightning strike that damaged underground wiring in the campus's aging north loop electrical grid. All afternoon and evening classes were cancelled on September 4, and the problem persisted off and on from late August through October 2019, prompting nearly 4,000 students to sign a petition demanding tuition reimbursements and spotlighting the institution's chronic infrastructure underinvestment.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
0
Injured
0
Institution
Tennessee State University
Hbcu · TN
~8,000 students
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTEmail
Approximate reconstruction305 chars
TSU NOTICE: Due to power outages affecting multiple areas of campus, all afternoon and evening classes on the main campus are suspended for today, Wednesday, September 4. Contractors are on site working to restore power. Residence halls are being managed and updates will be provided as power is restored.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Power began going out in parts of campus at around 8:45 AM CST on September 4, 2019, when contractors working on the system due to high voltage started switching off power
All afternoon and evening classes on the main campus were suspended for the remainder of September 4
The initial cause was reported as contractor work, but the root cause was later determined to be a lightning strike that damaged underground wiring in the north loop electrical grid
UPDATEEmail
Approximate reconstruction346 chars
TSU NOTICE: Power outages continue to affect portions of campus. Several academic and residential buildings are experiencing intermittent power interruptions. Contractors continue to work on the electrical system. Check TSU's website and social media for building-specific updates. Classes affected will be communicated by individual departments.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Power outages recurred off and on from late August through October 2019 without a definitive fix during this period
Multiple campus buildings including residence halls were affected at different times; some dorms ran on generators
Nearly 4,000 students signed an online petition requesting tuition reimbursements for the disruptions across the fall 2019 semester
Context

Background

Tennessee State University, a historically Black university in Nashville, began experiencing sporadic but recurring power outages in late August 2019 that escalated on September 4, when contractors working on the high-voltage system switched off power to portions of campus, leading the university to cancel all afternoon and evening classes for the day. Investigations eventually revealed that a lightning strike had damaged underground wiring in the campus's north loop electrical system, which combined with the age of the grid created a compounding failure that proved difficult to permanently resolve. Power outages in several academic and public-use facilities occurred intermittently from late August through October 2019, with multiple class cancellations throughout the semester. Residence halls were impacted, with some running on generators. Student frustration mounted significantly: nearly 4,000 TSU students signed an online petition calling on university leadership to provide tuition reimbursements for the fall semester. Coverage by HBCU Buzz placed the outages in the context of systemic infrastructure underinvestment at historically Black colleges and universities, many of which operate with aging physical plants that receive less capital investment than comparable predominantly white institutions. The TSU power outages became an example of the broader HBCU infrastructure equity challenge, in which deferred maintenance accumulates until normal weather events (like a single lightning strike) trigger extended cascading failures.
Analysis

Key Findings

A single lightning strike revealed the fragility of TSU's aging north loop electrical infrastructure, triggering months of intermittent outages rather than a single recoverable event
Nearly 4,000 students signed a tuition reimbursement petition -- roughly half of TSU's enrollment at the time -- reflecting the severity of the cumulative academic disruption
HBCU Buzz characterized the outages as a systemic HBCU infrastructure equity problem, connecting TSU's situation to broader capital investment disparities
The pattern of aging infrastructure failure at TSU mirrors similar events at NC A&T (boiler explosions), Grambling State (repeated flooding), and other HBCUs, reflecting structural underfunding across the sector
Outcome
Recurring power outages affected multiple academic and public-use buildings from late August through October 2019. All afternoon and evening classes cancelled September 4. Classes cancelled for the full day at least once more during the extended outage period. Residence halls impacted with some running on generators. Nearly 4,000 students signed petition for tuition reimbursements. Root cause: lightning-damaged underground wiring in the north loop power grid, compounded by an aged electrical system. University faced HBCU Buzz coverage highlighting systemic infrastructure deficits.
Provenance

Sources

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Tags
power-outagehbcutennesseenashvilleinfrastructure-failureaging-infrastructurehbcu-equitystudent-petition
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion